NEW YORK, May 22, 2026, 10:52 EDT
Spotify Technology shares rose again on Friday, extending a sharp rally sparked by the company’s new artificial-intelligence music tools, a Universal Music Group deal and fresh profit targets through 2030. The stock was recently trading near $528, up about 8% from Thursday’s $489.93 close, after a 13% jump the previous session.
The move matters because investors have been looking for evidence that Spotify can turn its vast listener base into higher profit, not just more users. At its investor day in New York, the company pitched a broader business built around paid add-ons, fan data and more interactive media, with co-CEO Alex Norström saying “the opportunity ahead has never been greater.” newsroom.spotify.com
Spotify set targets for mid-teens annual revenue growth through 2030, gross margin of 35% to 40%, and operating margin above 20%. Gross margin is the share of revenue left after direct costs such as royalties and delivery expenses; operating margin is operating profit as a share of revenue. CFO Christian Luiga said the company’s main measures were “engagement, revenue, efficiency, and retention.” newsroom.spotify.com
The biggest new product hook was a licensing agreement with Universal Music Group that will let Premium users create AI-generated covers and remixes from participating artists and songwriters. Spotify said the feature will be a paid add-on and that creators would share in value generated from the licensed remixes. Norström said the plan was built on “consent, credit, and compensation.” newsroom.spotify.com
That gives Spotify a cleaner story in generative AI, where it is trying to fend off startups such as Udio and Suno while also competing with YouTube for podcast and creator attention. Reuters reported that subscribers will get limited initial use of the remix tool before needing to buy the add-on, and that financial terms of the Universal deal were not disclosed.
Analysts moved quickly. Jefferies analyst James Heaney called the 2030 targets “constructive” and said they addressed concerns about AI hurting long-term margins; Jefferies raised its price target to $600 from $540 and kept a Buy rating. Rosenblatt lifted its target to $534 from $500 while staying Neutral. investing.com
Spotify also leaned into concerts. Its new “Reserved” feature will identify eligible Premium subscribers who are among an artist’s most dedicated fans and hold up to two tickets for them before a general sale, starting in the U.S. this summer. Charlie Hellman, Spotify’s head of music, told Music Business Worldwide that fan selection is “not as simple as total stream volume.” newsroom.spotify.com
The company already had scale to sell into. In the first quarter, Spotify reported 761 million monthly active users, 293 million Premium subscribers, revenue of €4.5 billion, gross margin of 33% and operating income of €715 million.
The rally came against a firmer tape. Wall Street rose on Friday and the Dow hit an intraday record high as investors watched U.S.-Iran talks and bought into stronger earnings and AI-linked demand. U.S. stock markets were on normal hours Friday before closing Monday for Memorial Day, according to NYSE holiday schedules and market reports.
But the trade is not clean. Spotify still has to prove users will pay for AI remixes, ticket access and other add-ons without hurting subscriber growth, while ad growth remains a soft spot. Barclays had warned before the event that AI costs were drawing more investor attention than AI revenue, and that Spotify needed a clearer monetization plan to avoid losing control of the narrative.
For now, the stock is reacting to a better growth story: more ways to charge engaged users, a major-label AI framework, and a management team willing to put numbers on the next four years. The next test is whether those products move from investor-day slides into revenue quickly enough to justify the new bid in the shares.